Once linebacker Denzel Nkemdiche was seen in street clothes and using crutches on the sidelines at Tiger Stadium on Saturday, there were fears the junior could have suffered yet another major injury. Those fears were correct as Nkemdiche underwent surgery Sunday to repair a fracture ankle he suffered early in the Rebels’ 10-7 loss to LSU. (October 28, 2014, Page 6)

BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) — Bo Wallace isn’t about to dwell on his first game-losing throw of the season. Even amid the din that persisted in LSU’s Death Valley long after the Tigers’ victory-sealing interception, Mississippi’s gun-slinging quarterback was calm, clear and succinct in declaring the Rebels’ resolve. (October 27, 2014, Page 6)

BATON ROUGE, La. — Ole Miss didn’t get out of Death Valley alive. The Rebels’ offense was bottled up by LSU, a UM defense that’s been virtually immovable was pushed around, and No. 3 Ole Miss fell from the ranks of the unbeaten with a 10-7 loss Saturday night in front of 102,321 at Tiger Stadium. (October 26, 2014, Page 1B)

BATON ROUGE, La. — Were you surprised by Ole Miss’ loss to LSU? Considering how the Tigers have looked at times this season, that’s fair. But don’t act like you were shocked. (October 26, 2014, Page 1B)

BATON ROUGE, La. — Death Valley is where things go to die in Baton Rouge. Saturday night it was the Ole Miss offense that became Tiger Stadium’s latest victim. Negative plays, penalties and Bo Wallace’s first interception in Southeastern Conference play all had a hand in the Rebels’ 10-7 loss to No. 24 LSU. (October 26, 2014, Page 2B)

Ole Miss is in the midst of one of the best seasons in school history, enjoying its first 7-0 start since 1962 and a No. 3 national ranking. A win over LSU in Tiger Stadium would make things even sweeter. The Rebels (7-0, 4-0 SEC) will travel to Baton Rouge, Louisiana, on Saturday for a night game at Death Valley. Ole Miss hasn’t beaten the 24th-ranked Tigers (6-2, 2-2) on their own turf since 2008, and the latest of those setbacks was a bittersweet pill to swallow. (October 24, 2014, Page 6A)

The role of Special teams is always vital in a football game. When Ole Miss and LSU get together that role is kick up a notch and more times than not decides the outcome. The now infamous Billy Cannon game-winning punt return in 1959 all the way to Odell Beckham Jr.’s 89-yard punt return in 2012, special teams has defined this rivalry. (October 23, 2014, Page 7A)

Ole Miss’ men’s basketball team is loaded with experience, and it has some folks believing it’s good enough to finish in the top half of the Southeastern Conference this season. (October 23, 2014, Page 7A)